The renowned scholar of comparative religions explores how we can use religion to meet global challenges.
Armstrong taps into her encyclopedic knowledge to offer a way forward for a hurting world. Though the author primarily addresses environmental concerns, she delves deeper to investigate how the world’s religions have treated the entirety of what is beyond the self. The author examines the ways in which faith traditions are grounded in an understanding and appreciation for the natural world, but the moral lessons involved are broader and more consequential. First, however, Armstrong seeks to convince readers to view nature through nonmodern eyes. “Unlike in our modern environmental discourse,” she writes, “nature was presented and experienced imaginatively and aesthetically rather than scientifically, and this involved the emotions and the body.” In numerous ancient cultures, religious ceremonies “not only expressed a deep anxiety about the sustainability of our world but made great demands on participants, who were expected not just to honor the divine in nature but also to reform themselves.” Throughout the book, the author reminds readers of one of the fundamental differences between modern perceptions of nature as something separate and that of ancient cultures, which sought a close unity with the created world. Tying together dramatic creation tales, complex moral systems, and scriptural musings on the natural world, Armstrong argues for gratitude, mutual caregiving, and stewardship of resources, among other practices, to help bring us closer to our environment and, ultimately, to each other. “We simply need to recognize the sacrality of everything around us and observe how the myriad things tirelessly support one another,” she writes. This concept of interconnectedness permeates many faith traditions as well as this text. While not one of Armstrong’s most original or brilliant works, this book still is worth contemplating and discussing, and it serves as a fitting companion to the author’s earlier work, Twelve Steps to a Compassionate Life.
Thought-provoking wisdom regarding the natural world.